There is reason to suspect that about half of the baryons are in
pressure-supported plasma in the halos of normal galaxies, drawn in by gravity
along with about half of the dark matter. To be consistent with the
observations this baryonic component, the corona, would have to be hotter than
the kinetic temperature of the dark matter in the halo so as to produce
acceptable central electron densities. We ascribe this hotter plasma
temperature to the addition of entropy prior to and during assembly of the
system, in an analogy to cluster formation. The plasma cooling time would be
longer than the gravitational collapse time but, in the inner parts, shorter
than the Hubble time, making the corona thermally unstable to the formation of
a cloudy structure that may be in line with what is indicated by quasar
absorption line systems. The corona of an isolated spiral galaxy would be a
source of soft X-ray and recombination radiation, adding to the more commonly
discussed effects of stars and supernovae. In this picture the mass in the
corona is much larger than the mass in condensed baryons in a spiral galaxy.
The corona thus would be a substantial reservoir of diffuse baryons that are
settling and adding to the mass in interstellar matter and stars, so that star
formation in isolated spirals will continue well beyond the present epoch.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure